With an eye on China’s large pool of software developers and growing economic significance, SAP plans to more than triple the staff at its R&D facility in Shanghai by 2008, a company spokesman said Monday.The plan is to increase staff at SAP Labs China to 1,800 from more than 400 today, according to SAP spokesman Frank Hartmann. “Business in China is good, but this isn’t the only reason we’re expanding there,” Hartmann said. “China has meanwhile become an important link in our distributed product development network.”Launched in November 2003, SAP Labs China has grown beyond being a localization facility serving Chinese customers to one of SAP’s key global development centers, according to Hartmann. The facility, which relocated to a larger building last week, focuses on software for small and medium-size businesses (SMBs) in Asia, Europe and North America, he said. One of its recent developments is the toolkit for the SAP Safe Passage migration program for companies running Oracle’s PeopleSoft and J.D. Edwards applications.Of the 6,000 people SAP currently employs in Asia, more than 1,000 are in China, including the staff at the Shanghai lab, according to Hartmann. Over the next two years, the Walldorf, Germany, vendor plans to invest between €80 million (US$96 million) and €100 million in China, he said.In addition to Shanghai, SAP operates labs in Tokyo (Japan), Bangalore (India), Ra’anana (Israel), Sophia Antipolis (France), Sofia (Bulgaria), Budapest (Hungary), Walldorf (Germany) and Palo Alto (California). The labs are at the heart of SAP’s product development efforts, responsible for researching and creating new applications.SAP also operates a global network of research centers and “campus-based engineering centers,” which focus primarily on identifying new trends and developing new technologies relevant to the company’s target markets. Currently, the network consists of research and engineering centers in Brisbane (Australia), Montreal (Canada), Sophia Antipolis (France), Walldorf, Darmstadt, Dresden and Karlsruhe (Germany), Pretoria (South Africa), Belfast (Northern Ireland) and Palo Alto (California).-John Blau, IDG News ServiceFor related news coverage, read SAP Boosts Its SCM Software and Study Attempts to Debunk SAP Ad Claims; SAP Refutes Research.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Who’s paying your data integration tax? Reducing your data integration tax will get you one step closer to value—let’s start today. By Sandrine Ghosh Jun 05, 2023 4 mins Data Management feature 13 essential skills for accelerating digital transformation IT leaders too often find themselves behind on business-critical transformation efforts due to gaps in the technical, leadership, and business skills necessary to execute and drive change. By Stephanie Overby Jun 05, 2023 12 mins Digital Transformation IT Skills tip 3 things CIOs must do now to accurately hit net-zero targets More than a third of the world’s largest companies are making their net-zero targets public, yet nearly all will fail to hit them if they don’t double the pace of emissions reduction by 2030. This puts leading executives, CIOs in particul By Diana Bersohn and Mauricio Bermudez-Neubauer Jun 05, 2023 5 mins CIO Accenture Emerging Technology case study Merck Life Sciences banks on RPA to streamline regulatory compliance Automated bots assisted in compliance, thereby enabling the company to increase revenue and save precious human hours, freeing up staff for higher-level tasks. By Yashvendra Singh Jun 05, 2023 5 mins Digital Transformation Robotic Process Automation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe